I'm hoping someone can give me some pointers. I'm working with a new Dell Laptop and I've noticed that while running Linux (which I'd like to do 100% of the time) my wireless network connection is so slow that its basically unusable.

When I go to YouTube, it takes several minutes just to start playing a video and when it does it sits at buffering every few seconds. I thought maybe there was some kind of problem with my NetGear N Router so I booted into Windows 7 and suddenly the connection is fast as lightening. No buffering or anything. I'm getting between 2-4 MBps on Windows 7 but only 250KBps - 500KBps on Linux. I've also noticed that in Windows I always have 100% signal strength but in Linux I almost never get above 60% signal strength.

This is an Intel Centrino Wireless N 1030 embedded wireless adapter.

I started with Slackware64 and moved to OpenSuSe64 and both had the same result.

Please help me work this out because its driving me insane! :)

syg00

06-10-2012 08:46 PM

Probably a driver issue. I had similar with a 3945 years ago - ifconfig showed truckloads of errors.
iwlwifi should support that chip - what does "lshw -c network" show for your driver ?.

thund3rstruck

06-11-2012 07:22 AM

Quote:

Probably a driver issue. I had similar with a 3945 years ago - ifconfig showed truckloads of errors.
iwlwifi should support that chip - what does "lshw -c network" show for your driver ?.

Thanks for the reply. Please bear with me, the wireless on this Linux laptop is so it literally takes 20 minutes just to get onto this site and post a reply. The connection is so slow in fact that hitting the post reply button will result in 2 or 3 page timeouts before I finally get a response from the server.

The Wireless router is a NetGear WNDR3800 a/b/g/n router. It has 2 SSIDs, one for 2/4GHZ and one for 5GHZ (a/n only). Configured for WPA2-PSK (AES) 300 Mbps.

While booted into Windows 7 the speeds are blazingly fast on the N network. I don't necessarily need Linux to match the Windows N wifi speed but I need it to at least function, rather than taking 30 seconds to load every page and timing out every couple of postbacks.

Interesting, no ???.
It's still there, despite I am now on a 3.3.7 (Fedora 16) kernel.

I'll drop it out later and do some more testing.

thund3rstruck

06-11-2012 08:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by syg00
(Post 4700607)

My memory must be failing. Just had a look at my "notes" wiki:
Interesting, no ???.
It's still there, despite I am now on a 3.3.7 (Fedora 16) kernel.

I'll drop it out later and do some more testing.

I'm highly grateful for any assistance you can give... I did notice that iwlist shows my SSID as Encryption Key: off, even though the access point uses WPA2-PSK [AES]? Not sure what that's about or if it has any impact on the dialup speeds I'm getting from my N router on this Linux machine but just thought I toss it out there.

The connectivity is fine, it's just that the speeds are so slow that I just can't use Linux on this machine since its always connected to a wireless network. It did occur to me that this is a brand new Dell machine so perhaps I might just have to wait for Linux to catch up if by chance the Intel Wireless N chipset isn't supported yet.

syg00

06-11-2012 07:54 PM

I wonder if its related to that power magament being on - have a read of this thread.

thund3rstruck

06-12-2012 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by syg00
(Post 4701039)

I wonder if its related to that power magament being on - have a read of this thread.

Hmm... this is interesting! I use this machine at night in bed with my wife and I never use it while plugged in (whats the point of a laptop if it has to be plugged in!). I will try this tonight to see if the speed increases while plugged in and if so I might be closer to getting this resolved!

thund3rstruck

06-14-2012 06:56 AM

Well the results are quite striking...

While the laptop is plugged into the wall:

Code:

Ping: 16ms
Download: 25.26 Mbps
Upload: 5.66 Mbps

When the power plug is unplugged:

Code:

Ping: 951 ms
Download: 0.06 Mbps
Upload: 0.44 Mbps

I have seen the same result on three separate Linux distributions. Anyone have any ideas how to fix this on openSuSe 12.1?

thund3rstruck

06-16-2012 11:06 PM

Anyone....? I'm just about at the breaking point here. Surely lots of other Linux laptop users have this problem...

SouthernRoots

08-20-2012 02:40 PM

I don't want to re-open an old thread but this is the only case I have found that perfectly match with my case.

thund3rstruck, did you solve your centrino 1030 wifi issues?? How are you dealing with it on OpenSUSE?

thund3rstruck

08-21-2012 12:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SouthernRoots
(Post 4759466)

I don't want to re-open an old thread but this is the only case I have found that perfectly match with my case.
thund3rstruck, did you solve your centrino 1030 wifi issues?? How are you dealing with it on OpenSUSE?

Unfortunately this is one of those rare cases where I can't figure it out and no one is even willing to acknowledge the problem exists. I have posted on the Novell forums and LQ Forums and I've even reached out to the various linux channels on FreeNode IRC. I found some related posts on a Arch forum but it didn't work for me.

I'm at a loss really. I've tried Slackware, OpenSuSe, Ubuntu, and Fedora and they all have the same symptoms. Unplug the AC Adapter and your network speed drops so low that you can't use it anymore.

So, I'm back on Windows 7. Every now and then when I'm somewhere that I'm gonna be plugged in for a while I'll boot into Linux. It really upsets me because in the past I have always dedicated old hardware for Linux and this was the first time that I specifically purchased a brand new top of the line machine exclusively for Linux.

SouthernRoots

08-22-2012 11:29 AM

thund3rstruck, did you try changing the kernel version? I have heard that people solved the issue by updating lo latest available kernel.
What version of openSUSE are you using? Here I have same issues and even plugged the wireless adapter is unusable.

thund3rstruck

08-26-2012 07:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SouthernRoots
(Post 4761249)

thund3rstruck, did you try changing the kernel version? I have heard that people solved the issue by updating lo latest available kernel.
What version of openSUSE are you using? Here I have same issues and even plugged the wireless adapter is unusable.

Code:

$ uname -r
3.1.10-1.16-desktop

No luck on any of the kernels using OpenSuSe. I re-ran the speed analysis and it's still abysmal compared to the same test run after plugging in the AC cord.